San Francisco: Amazon has laid off over 100 employees in its gaming divisions, including Prime Gaming, Game Growth, and Amazon Games. The move comes as part of the company’s ongoing restructuring plan, which includes reassigning workers to projects that fit its “strategic focus.” According to a report in Engadget, the laid-off employees will receive severance pay, health benefits, and paid time to find new jobs.
In an internal memo, Amazon said that the cuts come after the company weighed its ongoing projects against its “long-term goals.” Currently, Amazon is only offering the “New World” game, and its attempt to popularize a free-to-play shooter game called “Crucible” was shut down after just a few months.
This latest round of layoffs follows Amazon’s announcement in March that it would be laying off another 9,000 employees across its Amazon Web Services (AWS), Twitch, advertising, and HR divisions. In a memo to staff, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said that the job cuts would mark the second-largest round of layoffs in the company’s history, adding to the 18,000 employees that the company said it would lay off in January.
In a memo, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said that as the company concluded the second phase of its operating plan. "I'm writing to share that we intend to eliminate about 9,000 more positions in the next few weeks, mostly in AWS, PXT, Advertising, and Twitch." Amazon initially eliminated 18,000 positions in January and as "we completed the second phase of our planning this month, it led us to these additional 9,000 role reductions".
Jassy said that the second phase of the company’s annual planning process, which determines what areas of the business to trim, had led to the additional job cuts. He also said that Amazon will still be hiring in some strategic areas.
While Amazon’s workforce doubled during the pandemic, the company has been making trims in areas where it sees potential cost savings. Earlier this month, the company said it would pause construction on its headquarters building in northern Virginia, although the first phase of that project will open this June and welcome 8,000 employees.